Category: News Update

  • We will turn flood disaster to a blessing – Jonathan

    We will turn flood disaster to a blessing – Jonathan

    President Goodluck Jonathan on Wednesday said his administration will turn the flood that has terribly ravaged some states of the federation into a blessing.

    The President said he has concluded arrangements to release money to the ministry of Agriculture to see ways on how farmers in the country, especially those in the affected areas can improve on their yields so that hunger will not follow the flood.

    He also pointed out that a reasonable some will also be given to the ministry for Health to identify ways to tackle diseases that may be associated with the floods.

    He promised that government will ensure the completion of Kashimbila Dam in 2013, earlier than the projected 2014 date given by the contractors.

     

  • Nigeria demands global action on religious extremism

    Nigeria demands global action on religious extremism

    Nigerian on Wednesday demanded immediate and sustained global action to deal with the problem of religious extremism in some parts of the world.

    Senate President, Senator David Mark, made the demand in a speech at the 127th Assembly of the Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU) holding in Quebec, Canada.

    Our correspondent covering the conference reports that apart from dealing a blow on religious fundamentalism, Mark said that steps should be taken to address the crippling effects of ethnicity.

    The conference has the theme: “Citizenship, identity, cultural and linguistic diversity in a globalised world.”

    Mark noted that tackling religious extremism and ethnicity would help to reduce divisive tendencies in parts of the world.

    He reiterated that “though tribe and tongue may differ, in brotherhood we want.”

    The Senate President proposed that there should be an acknowledgement that all parts of the world are blessed with different linguistic and cultural diversities with Nigerian alone having over 250 tribes.

    Secondly, he said that there should be further acknowledgement that “these nature-made diversities were not meant to divide the world, but to give it the tonic of variety which is globally acknowledged as the spice of life.”

    He restated that more than ever before humanity has come to understand that despite language, ethnic, cultural, race, religious, gender as well as political inclination and economic diversities, it is through brotherhood that progress could be achieved in the world.

    Mankind, he said, has also come to appreciate the more that no community, whether local or international, is an island to itself.

     

  • Lagos targets 80% budget performance

    Lagos targets 80% budget performance

    The Permanent Secretary, Lagos State Ministry of Economic Planning and Budget, Mr. Bayo Sodade has said that government would achieve over 80 per cent budget performance by end of 2012.

    Sodade said this at a workshop organised by the Ministry of Local Government Affairs in Lagos on Tuesday.

    According to him, the state’s budget performance currently stands at 72 per cent.

    The permanent secretary said the allocation to the various sectors in the 2013 budget reflected government’s priorities in sustaining past trends.

    He said that the highest priority went to the economic affairs sector in line with the policy thrust of the state government, adding that the economic sector was driven by infrastructure.

    The permanent secretary said that health and education sectors were also being gradually nurtured to meet international benchmark.

    On the reforms in the Lagos State Public Finance System, Sodade said that the state intended to grow its Gross Domestic Product (GDP) by 10 per cent by 2020, up from the current 7.5 per cent.

    He listed some of the challenges confronting the state to include resource inadequacy, huge infrastructure gap, influx of people from neighbouring states, high crime rate and unemployment.

    He gave an assurance that there would be efficient allocation of resources across all sectors in the 2013 budget.

    The News Agency of Nigeria reports that at the end of the workshop, the participants called for continuous capacity building for council officials to improve efficiency and productivity.

     

  • Pope appoints Onaiyekan, five others as cardinals

    Pope appoints Onaiyekan, five others as cardinals

    Pope Benedict on Wednesday appointed Archbishop John Olorunfemi Onaiyekan and five others from around the world to join the elite group of prelates who will one day choose his successor.

    Onaiyekan is the current Roman Catholic Archbishop of Abuja.

    He was also a former President of the Christian Association of Nigeria.

    The ceremony, known as a consistory, will be held on November 24, the pope said in a surprise announcement at his weekly general audience.

    Also named to join the group known as the “princes” of the Catholic Church are Archbishop James Michael Harvey, an American who runs the pontifical household, Beatitude Bechara Boutros Rai, patriarch of the Maronite Catholic Church in Lebanon, and Baselios Cleemis Thottunkal, the major archbishop of the Syro-Malankara rite in India.

    Others are – Archbishop Ruben Salazar Gomez of Bogota, Colombia, and Archbishop Luis Antonio Tagle of Manila in the Philippines.

    Reuters says all of the six new cardinals are under 80 years old and thus eligible under Church law to enter a conclave to elect a new pope.

    The elite group is known as “cardinal electors.”

    After the consistory, the number of cardinal electors will rise again to 120, the maximum allowed under Church law.

    The total number of men in the College of Cardinals will be 211.

    It was the fifth time since his election in 2005 that Benedict, 85, has named new cardinals.

    The pope’s health is generally believed to be good but he has been looking frail recently.

     

  • Obasanjo to play leading role at energy summit

    Obasanjo to play leading role at energy summit

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo is set to play a leading role in the ongoing African Energy Summit, in Dubai, the Chairman, World Energy Forum, Dr. Harold Oh, has said.

    Oh disclosed this on the official Website of the 2012 World Energy Forum taking place in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.

    He said the Summit was an integral part of the World Energy Forum, adding that Obasanjo had been admitted as a new member of the Board of Directors of the global body.

    “President Obasanjo will play a leading role in the African Energy Summit which is an integral part of World Energy Forum 2012,’’ the News Agency of Nigeria quoted the WEF chairman as saying on the summit.

    Over 80 participants including Presidents, Prime Ministers and their representatives from different parts of the globe as well as the management of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, are attending the three-day event.

    The event is being held outside the United Nations headquarters in New York, for the first time.

    The summit is expected to come up with a universally cheap access to energy and sustainable development as well as re-define progressive energy infrastructure “for all.”

     

  • Nigeria lost 500,000 bpd oil output to floods – DPR

    Nigeria lost 500,000 bpd oil output to floods – DPR

    Nigeria lost around 500,000 barrels per day (bpd) of oil production due to severe flooding in recent weeks but output is now back to normal, an oil industry regulator told Reuters on Wednesday.

    Nigeria’s oil is exported to the United States, Asia and Europe and supply disruptions can affect world prices because it is priced against the Brent oil benchmark.

    The country has experienced its worst flooding in five decades this year. The Niger River burst its banks last month, submerging stretches of the swampy oil-rich region in flood waters.

    “It was as a result of the recent flooding. Around 500,000 bpd was shut down for a two to three week period but things are back to normal now,” a spokesman for the Department of Petroleum Resources said by phone.

    Shell said its Nigerian venture had declared force majeure on exports of the Bonny and Forcados crudes on Friday, citing damage caused by thieves and flooding affecting a third-party supplier it did not identify.

    Bonny Light and Forcados are two of Nigeria’s most important oil grades and in October accounted for 427,000 bpd, about a fifth of the country’s total exports of 2.048 million bpd.

    On September 30, Shell said its Nigerian unit closed the Bonny pipeline which sends crude to the Bonny terminal and stopped 150,000 bpd of production after oil thieves caused a fire.

    Separately, French oil company Total on Tuesday told Reuters it had stopped oil and gas production from its onshore OML 58 block due to flooding.

    The block, in which Total has a 40 percent stake, normally produces the equivalent of 90,000 bpd of oil.

     

  • ‘630 schools submerged by flood in Delta’

    ‘630 schools submerged by flood in Delta’

    Delta State Governor, Emmanuel Uduaghan, has said that 630 primary and secondary schools in the state were submerged by flood.

    Uduaghan gave the figure, on Tuesday, while receiving the South-South Traditional Rulers’ Forum, led by its Chairman, Dr. Edmond Daukoru, in his office, in Asaba.

    He lamented the devastation caused by the flood, adding that the state government had set up camps for the persons displaced by the incident.

    “It has not been easy managing the flood victims; the state lost about 450 primary schools and 180 secondary schools to the flood. They have all been submerged”, the News Agency of Nigeria quoted Uduaghan as saying at the meeting.

    The governor, who commended the Federal Government for approving N500 million for the management of the victims in the state, said the state government had set up a committee to manage the funds.

    He thanked the traditional rulers for their role in maintaining peace and security and urged them to sustain the effort.

    Earlier, Daukoru told the governor that the traditional rulers came to seek partnership with the political class toward strengthening security in the region.

    He added that the forum was also concerned about the welfare of the flood victims and how the problem was being managed in the affected states in the region.

     

  • Taraba grapples with flood, blasts

    Taraba grapples with flood, blasts

    Hit by flood and a rash of bomb blasts, fate has been unkind to Taraba State lately.

    No fewer than 19 persons died in the flood in the state, which swept through several parts of the country. About 12 people are still missing in the state, while 218 villages were wrecked by the waters in eight of its 16 local government areas. It is reckoned that 69,640 persons were directly affected in the disaster.

    The affected local government areas are Ardo-Kola, Ibi, Wukari, Gassol, Lau, Karim-Lamido, Kurmi and Sardauna.

    But as the people grieved, Jalingo, the state capital, was rocked by explosions, its fourth experience since the Boko Haram hostilities began. At least eight persons were injured in the blast in Mallam Joda, a rustic suburb of the state capital.

    The bomb hit the usually quiet community just a day after another bomb rocked Dorowa, a 24-hour bubbling ghetto in the spine of the capital city.

    The victims included petty traders and commercial sex workers in the vicinity. Apart from the building, food, drinks, cigarette, kola-nut, condoms were ruined.

    Eyewitnesses said a bomb was detonated at dusk time in a drinking outlet in Mallam Joda in the same fashion as the Dorowa incident.

    Police posts and government structures had been the targets of terror attacks, but recently local brew bars, patronised by fun seekers, have become an attraction in the state.

    Police spokesman in the state, Amos Alaoye, in a chat with Newsextra, said: “The state command has arrested some suspects who are in the custody, in connection with the bombings”.

    Residents think some of the suspected bombers may live in the neighbourhoods, probably making their explosives locally.

    Many residents have been living in fear since the area became a scene of bomb blasts.

    Grappling with the security challenge in the affected districts has not been easy, it was learnt.

    A government official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, told Newsextra how his younger brother may have foiled a bomb attack on his wife’s business joint. He said some suspected bombers first went to his wife’s drinking place but were not allowed to settle down by his younger brother who said he noticed their unusual dressing and behaviour. No sooner had they left the place than the sound of a bomb blast was heard outside the shop.

    The source said: “When I was returning home from work, my younger brother called me, saying that he has seen a strange person in my wife’s place. I asked him how strange the intruder was; he said they looked like Boko Haram members, so he chased them away. He insisted I must come back quickly because they were afraid”

    “In less than 10 minutes before I could return, I heard a bomb explode close to my wife’s joint and the same person who was chased away by my younger brother was among the two people the youths arrested and handed over to the policemen who rushed to the scene of the blast”.

    The explosions have paralysed the Taraba state capital. The bustle that characterised Dorowa, for instance, has vanished. It is said with only N50, one could eat a plate of food in Dorowa and be satisfied. But since the blasts, things have changed, said Agnes, a resident.

    Dozens of persons have fled the state capital in the aftermath of the blasts. This is not good for a state that was already traumatised by flood, which destroyed houses and vast farmlands as well as livestock.

    The pandemonium resulting from the blasts has refused to leave Jalingo people, who have now moderated their operations, especially at night.

    It would be recalled that on April 30, a bomber rode on a motorcycle and hit the convoy of the former state Commissioner of Police, Mr. Mamman Sule.

    At least 11 persons were killed in the early morning suicide attack, which appeared to be targeted at the police chief who was newly redeployed to Jalingo. Twenty persons were seriously injured, including a police corporal Usman Suleiman who was the outrider on the commissioner’s convoy. The bomber was also blown up by the blast that sent the city to sleep as soon as it woke up for the day’s activities.

    There was another bombing on May 11. Although, there were no casualties, the panic paralysed the economic and social life of the once peaceful people. Two suspected bombers reportedly drove past a police van before dropping an explosive. It was gathered that the timing was miscalculated, so the bomb exploded a few seconds after the police van had passed the scene.

    After those bombings, the terrorists changed tactics: in the last blasts, they struck at night.

    The flood is a different disaster. President Goodluck Jonathan has visited the camps of flood disaster victims in Taraba. He was in Lau, where seven people died.

    The president cheered up the people, saying flood is a natural disaster, which ravages even developed nations.

    “My personal residence is now under water,” he told the people.

    Jonathan put Taraba in category B’, alongside Jigawa, Kano, Bauchi, Kaduna, Niger, Nasarawa, Cross River, Edo, Lagos and Imo states in the ranks of desolation by flood.

    But Commissioner for Information, Mr. Emmanuel Bello said Taraba was relegated in the grouping.

    “We have the worst scenario of the flood disaster and ought to have been in category A or even A plus”, he said, explaining that the longest stretch of River Benue is found in the hinterlands of Taraba which caused devastations that many people especially passers-by have not seen.

    Executive Secretary, State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA), Nuvalga Dan Habu, said “10 persons were drowned in Karim-Lamido, seven died in Lau, while two perished in Gassol. Twelve persons are still missing; 28,139 persons have been displaced”.

    It was gathered that a bridge and 50 culverts collapsed to the flood even as 13 roads were either submerged or covered by debris, affecting the movement of people and traffic. Also 49 schools submerged by the flood, which has kept several pupils and students outside the classrooms.

    The flood also destroyed about 3,051 livestock, 80,764 farmlands, 26 churches and 27 mosques as well as 14 clinics in Taraba, said SEMA.

    Mama Hebbini Ciroma, an over 100-year-old resident of Karim-Lamido Local Government Area is among the victims. She said the last time she saw flood was about 85 years ago when she got married.

    “But the flood wasn’t up to this magnitude,” she said.

    Some expectant mothers gave birth in the camps without healthcare services. In 2005, flood destroyed the Nukai-Jalingo Bridge, killing 105 people, including a senior lecturer and deputy commissioner of police.

  • Flooding, insecurity delay MTN’s Network up-grade

    Flooding, insecurity delay MTN’s Network up-grade

    Telecom services provider, MTN has appealed for understanding from its customers and other key stakeholders as it continues its Network Modernization and swap-out exercise.

    The company’s Corporate Services Executive, Mr. Wale Goodluck at a press briefing on Tuesday in Lagos said the various activities related to MTN’s Network Modernization are progressing steadily. but noted that it was being affected by recent flood nationwide and insecurity.

    “We regret, however, that the pace of work has been considerably challenged by the spate of insecurity coupled with the unprecedented flooding being experienced in many parts of the country,” Goodluck stated.

    The network optimization exercise will affect over 4,000 base stations out of over 10, 000 across the country.

    According to Goodluck “the task that we are undertaking is tantamount to building a new network .We are seeking to replicate what we achieved over a six year period in nine months”.

    He explained that considerable progress has been recorded with regards to the ongoing network improvement plans adding that several swap-outs have reached very advanced stages of completion.

    “The entire network modernization process is a very logistic-intensive one and the problem of insecurity has seriously affected the pace of work in some parts of the country.”
    In at least 13 states, Goodluck added that flooding has created additional logistic impediments such that the pace of the ongoing network modernization efforts has slowed down.

    While acknowledging that MTN’s customers have been experiencing some disruption over the last few weeks, the Corporate Service Executive said as much as possible, the company would stick to its original plan of carrying out the network procedures only at night, in order to minimize disruptions to services.

    MTN’s current network modernization and swap-out exercise which began in July 2012 is expected to cover the entire country and was originally expected to span a period of nine months.
    Its objectives are to considerably enhance capacity on the MTN Network and improve service quality. Under the project, which is being implemented by a combined team of MTN engineers and technical partners that include Ericsson, Huawei and ZTE, key network components are being swapped with the latest upgrades in the industry. Current power systems are also being replaced with hybrid power systems which are more environment-friendly.

  • Gunmen kidnap housewife in Calabar

    …Demand N50m ransom

    Barely three days after two children abducted in Calabar by masked gunmen were freed, another person, this time, a housewife, has been kidnapped in the Cross River State capital.

    It was gathered that the housewife, Mrs. Ime Abasi was abducted by gunmen on Monday at about 10pm in her Ekei Ita Street, Ikot Ansa home.

    Her husband, Mr. Emmaneul Pius is based in Ilorin, Kwara State.

    Pius told The Nation on phone Tuesday that he called his wife’s phone at about 10pm on Monday and the phone was switched off.

    The husband said he made several attempts throughout the night but the line did not go through.

    When it eventually went through on Tuesday morning, his wife told him that she had been kidnapped by some gunmen.

    He said one of her captors seized the phone from her and told him not to call the number again until he was ready to negotiate.

    The kidnappers, according to him, demanded N50 million ransom.